Close to the Enemy STEPHEN POLIAKOFF Close to the Enemy STEPHEN POLIAKOFF

Callum and Frank Whittle, the Jet Plane Man

Before the story starts in Close to the Enemy Callum (played by Jim Sturgess) has worked with Frank Whittle, the inventor of the jet engine. As a very young man, Callum had seen how Whittle was frustrated in developing his invention by the indifference shown by the Air Ministry. Callum therefore knows at first hand the devastating price Britain paid for this extraordinary missed chance.

In 1929, Frank Whittle, a commissioned officer of 22, felt reasonably confident of making a convincing case for a concept of his own,  a potential revolution in aviation technology that could put Britain years ahead of its likely enemies. He was a jet engine pioneer who developed the initial idea of the jet engine using a gas turbine to produce a propelling jet. The Air Ministry rejected Whittle’s design as totally impractical and carried on ordering traditional planes with basic propellers. Whittle was bitterly disappointed at this rejection. However, despite having the door slammed in his face, he was urged by RAF colleagues to apply for a patent which he filed on January 16, 1930.
In October 1932, when the patent was granted, full specifications were published around the world and German diplomats in London wasted no time in ordering copies of the patent. Whittle’s patent expired in 1935 because the Air Ministry refused to pay for its renewal, and he couldn’t afford to do so at £5.

In 1936 in Germany, Herbert Wagner and Hans von Ohain independently and in secret began development of their own turbojet proposals. The British Air Ministry only realised as late as 1939 that Whittle’s design was feasible, at which point the German Air Force had been developing designs and testing for three years.

The first British jet engine propelled plane few into combat as late as 1944.
The continuing stress caused by all the obstacles Whittle had encountered caused him to have a nervous breakdown in the same year.

In the end, the jet engine played no significant role in the war. By the time jets were in operational use it was too little, too late. Hans von Ohain later said, “If the British experts had had the vision to back Whittle, World War II would probably never have happened. Hitler would have doubted the Luftwaffe’s ability to win.”

Jim Sturgess plays Callum Ferguson in Poliakoff's Close to the Enemy on BBC Two (2016)

Jim Sturgess plays Callum Ferguson in Poliakoff's Close to the Enemy on BBC Two (2016)

Frank Whittle, jet engineer. 

Frank Whittle, jet engineer. 

The jet engine from Close to the Enemy (2016) 

The jet engine from Close to the Enemy (2016) 

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Close to the Enemy STEPHEN POLIAKOFF Close to the Enemy STEPHEN POLIAKOFF

Close to the Enemy and the Plan to Oust Hitler

Part 4 of Close to the Enemy revealed, Foreign Office official, Harold Lindsay-Jones’ (Alfred Molina) secret of a planned coup to overthrow Hitler in 1938. Although Harold’s character is fictional the storyline is rooted in historical fact.

Part 4 of Close to the Enemy revealed, Foreign Office official, Harold Lindsay-Jones’ (Alfred Molina) secret knowledge of a planned coup to overthrow Hitler in 1938. Although Harold’s character is fictional the storyline is rooted in historical fact.

The build up to war and the rise of Hitler has long been attributed to the harshness of the Treaty of Versailles and the consequent backlash caused by the feeling of oppression that many of the German people felt. However this did not mean that the German people were in any way enthusiastic about the prospect of another war.
In fact, Hitler’s determination to risk conflict with Britain and France caused mounting opposition from the German military and, according to historian Professor David Reynolds, the German people had “no stomach for another European conflict”.

In August of 1938 Prussian aristocrat Ewald von Kleist met with Winston Churchill. Kleist claimed that with encouragement a number of German generals, led by General Beck, might refuse to march and appealed for some gesture ‘to crystallise the widespread and indeed, universal anti-war sentiment in Germany’. Theodor Kordt, who acted as Chargé d'Affaires at the German embassy in London, was considered a vital contact with the British on whom the success of the plot depended. The conspirators needed strong British opposition to Hitler's seizure of the Sudetenland.
Theodor Kordt conveyed the existence of a plan to mount a military coup against Hitler directly to Lord Halifax the Foreign Secretary. Churchill, who was merely a backbench MP at the time, also wrote to Halifax urging him to take the plot seriously.

However despite this intelligence detailing the date of the proposed attack and information about resistance to Hitler within the army, which reinforced information that the government had received from other sources, the Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain refused to take the plotters seriously. Churchill wrote to Chamberlain, urging him to support the conspirators, but he again refused and the Foreign Office was also deeply sceptical.

British diplomat Frank Roberts described the mind-set of the Foreign Office at that time; “By then General Beck and those sorts of people kept in touch with us by underground means and they used to come through me and it was a sort of thing of ‘if only you and the French would stand up to Hitler, so then we could do something about him'. And we were rather saying, 'hadn’t you better start doing something about him.... then perhaps we can help you.'”

The Foreign Office wanted the German military to act on their own and get rid of Hitler then the British would support the Generals after the fact. But the German military needed the British to lend them support in advance of the coup. If Britain and France had, at the crucial juncture of the Czechoslovakia crisis, mustered the will to draw a line in the sand it would have indicated their support for the proposed coup. However, Chamberlain's decision to appease Hitler and sign the Munich Agreement prevented the coup taking place.

Now available to download on BBC Store or buy on DVD on Amazon

Alfred Molina as Harold Lindsay-Jones in Close to the Enemy (2016)

Alfred Molina as Harold Lindsay-Jones in Close to the Enemy (2016)

Neville Chamberlain shakes hands with Hitler at the summit to sign the Munich Agreement (1938)

Neville Chamberlain shakes hands with Hitler at the summit to sign the Munich Agreement (1938)

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